Disability, Procreation, and Justice in the United States
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Nature of Disability
3. The Right to Procreate
[M]arriage and procreation are fundamental to the very existence and survival of the race. The power to sterilize, if exercised, may have subtle, far-reaching and devastating effects. In evil or reckless hands[,] it can cause races or types which are inimical to the dominant group to wither and disappear. There is no redemption for the individual whom the law touches. Any experiment which the State conducts is to his irreparable injury. He is forever deprived of a basic liberty.20
[R]eproductive rights embrace certain human rights that are already recognized in national laws, international laws and international human rights documents and other consensus documents. These rights rest on the recognition of the basic rights of all couples and individuals to decide freely and responsibly the number, spacing and timing of their children and to have the information and means to do so, and the right to attain the highest standard of sexual and reproductive health. It also includes the right to make decisions concerning reproduction free of discrimination, coercion and violence, as expressed in human rights documents.22
4. Justifications for Limiting Access to Procreation for People with Disabilities
4.1. Sex and Disability
4.2. Disability and Parenting
[T]he right to procreate is more than a byproduct of a right of choice. Its roots go deeper; they are constitutional in the physical sense, implicating the individual's rights to physical integrity and to retention of the biological capabilities with which he or she was born into this world. Hence, even in the case of a mentally competent individual, it is somewhat illogical to treat the right to procreate solely as a matter of control over basic personal decisions.53
4.3. Reproducing Disability
5. Conclusions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | Buck v. Bell, 274 U.S. 200 (1927). |
2 | Id. at 205. |
3 | I use the term “expert” here loosely as these were people who lacked connection to any scientifically sound methods of evaluating the quality of an individual’s genes and determining the risk that any so-called faulty genes would be passed from parent to child. |
4 | See (Lombardo 2001). |
5 | Id. |
6 | Id. |
7 | For a detailed account of the broad impact of eugenic thought in America, see (Lombardo 2016). |
8 | I use the term disabling here in a way that I hope indicates the complex scholarly discussion about the nature of disability that has spawned rich and persuasive literature about disability as a social construct that rejects or a least substantially complicates the medical model of disability. See, e.g., (Liachowitz 1988). I absolutely acknowledge that what makes something a disability can be the way that societies fail to accommodate the needs of bodies and minds that come in a variety of packages. That being said, it is true that a person who cannot hear or see or who is paralyzed has a condition that impacts that individual’s ability to engage in certain basic life functions such that accommodation of some sort becomes necessary. This premise is what underlies the legal definition of a disability as found in the laws like the Americans with Disabilities Act, which protects those who have a “physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities of such individual.” 42 U.S.C. §12102. |
9 | See, e.g., (Supreme Court of California 1985) (parents sought a court order allowing them to consent to a sterilization procedure for their adult developmentally disabled daughter); In re Moe, 432 N.E.2d 712 (mother of developmentally disabled adult daughter sought court permission to consent to a tubal ligation for her daughter); In re Guardianship of Hayes, 608 P.2d 635 (1980) (mother sought permission to consent to sterilization for her adult developmentally disabled daughter); In the Matter of C.D.M., K.C.M. & B.L.M., 627 P.2d 607 (1981) (parents sought permission to consent to tubal ligation on behalf of their developmentally disabled daughter); In re Grady, 426 A.2d 467(1981) (parents sought permission to consent to sterilization on behalf of their daughter who was living with Down Syndrome.); In re Johnson, 263 S.E.2d 805 (1980) (court allowed unconsented sterilization of developmentally disabled woman under N.C. statues over the woman’s objections). |
10 | See (National Council on Disabilities 2012), (“Removal rates where parents have a psychiatric disability have been found to be as high as 70 percent to 80 percent; where the parent has an intellectual disability, 40 percent to 80 percent. In families where the parental disability is physical, 13 percent have reported discriminatory treatment in custody cases. Parents who are deaf or blind report extremely high rates of child removal and loss of parental rights.”). |
11 | Id. at 23–24. |
12 | Some health conditions that increase pregnancy risks for women include Turner syndrome, a genetic disorder experienced only by women, or women with significant cardiac conditions such as peripartum cardiomyopathy (weakening of the heart muscle), and persistent left ventricular dysfunction. See (Ethics Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine 2016). |
13 | See (Spriggs 2002); see (Sanghavi 2006). |
14 | The Rehab Act was an early piece of legislation that prohibits discrimination against people with disabilities in Federal programs, including programs that receive federal funding, and federal employment, including companies that receive contracts from the federal government. |
15 | The ADA extends the protections of the Rehab Act to state and local governments, public accommodations, commercial facilities, transportation and telecommunications. |
16 | The IDEA creates affirmative obligations for public schools to make education available to children with living disabilities in the least restrictive environment. |
17 | Skinner v. Oklahoma, 316 U.S. 535 (1942). |
18 | Id. at 536–537 (1942). |
19 | Id. at 538–539. |
20 | Id. at 541. |
21 | See, e.g., Carey v. Population Servs. Int’l, 431 U.S. 678, 684–85 (1977); Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645, 651 (1972). |
22 | International Conference on Population and Development, Programme of Action, Para 7.3. |
23 | Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), Article 23(1)(a)-(b). |
24 | Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Article 23(1). |
25 | Id. |
26 | CRPD, Article 23(1)(c). |
27 | CRPD, Article 23(2). |
28 | Id. |
29 | There are statutory exceptions to the general rule that these rights are negative such as when the state child welfare system becomes involved with a family due to accusations of abuse or neglect and the state assumes an obligation to assist the parent in correcting the conditions that led to state supervision. |
30 | See (Solinger 2005). |
31 | This particular act of state sponsored abuse eventually led to change in consent procedures under guidelines to that public hospital and other facilities receiving public funds are bound to follow. See (Southern Poverty Law Center n.d.). |
32 | |
33 | Id. |
34 | See (Appel 2010), (arguing for a positive right to sex for people living with disabilities, including altering rules forbidding sexual relationships in institutional settings and creating carve out in prostitution prohibitions on behalf of people with disabilities). But see (Di Nucci 2011), (arguing against the existence of a positive right to sexual pleasure that could require financing by the state). |
35 | See (Kulick and Rydström 2015). |
36 | See (Smith 2014a). |
37 | See (Friedman and Owen 2017). |
38 | s.e. Smith, supra note 36. |
39 | See, e.g., (Euser 2016) (citing research concluding that children with disabilities have an increased prevalence of all kinds of abuse, include sexual abuse). |
40 | See (Johnson and Sigler 2000). |
41 | See (Young et al. 1997). |
42 | s.e. smith, supra note 36. |
43 | For a devastating case of how difficult questions of consent and agency can become when people with significant disabling conditions are involved, see the case of Anna Stubblefield, a tenured university professor convicted of sexually assaulting a profoundly disabled man with whom she claimed to be able to communicate using controversial facilitated communication techniques. See (Engber 2015). |
44 | National Council on Disability, Rocking the Cradle, supra note 10, at 17–21. |
45 | Ibid. at 20. |
46 | Ibid. at 22. |
47 | To be clear, I do not mean to suggest that the government is completely hands off when it comes to procreation, especially when it comes to disenfranchised populations. Welfare caps for poor women, ongoing sterilization abuse, overrepresentation of people of color in state child welfare systems, and abortion restrictions are all ways in which reproduction is tiered in the United States. But, it remains the case that our Constitution seems to disfavor pre-emptive bans on procreation. |
48 | For a more fleshed out analysis of the distinctions among sex, parenting, and procreation, see (Mutcherson 2015), in which the author argues that it is vital to recognize that parenting, sex, and procreation are distinct experiences all worthy of Constitutional recognition and protection and none of which should necessarily rely on the others in order to have such protection. Examples of how these three significant life experiences can exist without either of the others include women who contract to act as gestational carriers and give birth to children with whom they will have no genetic connection who they will not parent. Intended parents who commission a surrogacy may parent without procreating and without having sex. Similarly, a woman who sells her eggs to another so that the purchaser can produce a child can be said to be procreating in the sense that she is replicating her genes, but, like the gestational surrogate, she does so without an intent or interest in parenting. Thus, these separate strands of human experience can be intertwined or distinct. |
49 | Conservatorship of Valerie N., 707 P.2d 760, 761–763 (1985). |
50 | Id. at 770. |
51 | The Court ultimately did not allow for the sterilization to take place because of procedural failures in the lower court proceeding. Among other issues, the Court raised concern that there had been no evidence in the trial court that Valerie was fertile or that other forms of birth control, besides contraceptive pills, had been tried before resorting to a request for surgical sterilization. Id. at 777–778. |
52 | Id. at 763. |
53 | Id. at 786 (C.J. Bird dissenting). |
54 | See (Steinbock 1994). |
55 | See (Barbanel 1988). |
56 | See (Smith 2014b). |
57 | See (Reeves 2013). |
58 | Rocking the Cradle, supra note 10. |
59 | |
60 | See (Asch and Parens 1999). |
61 | Ibid at S2. |
62 | CRISPR is gene editing technology that holds promise for the prevention and treatment of several genetic diseases. (U.S. National Library of Medicine 2017), What are genome editing and CRISPR-Cas9? Available at https://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/primer/genomicresearch/genomeediting. |
63 | See (Kaplan 1994). |
64 | See (Solinger 2013). |
65 | Asch and Parens, supra note 60. |
66 | For an account of what would-be parents owe to the children who they seek to create, see (Savulescu 2001). Savulescu argues that “couples (or single reproducers) should select the child, of the possible children they could have, who is expected to have the best life, or at least as good a life as the others, based on the relevant, available information.” Savulescu at 415. |
67 | |
68 | Id. |
69 | I capitalize Deaf where appropriate to signify that the physical state of being deaf is considered to be cultural identity by many members of the Deaf community for whom hearing impairment is not a disability. |
70 | See (Mundy 2002). |
71 | See (Karpin 2007). |
72 | Mundy, supra note 68. |
73 | ASRM, supra note 67, at 1134. |
74 | Sanghavi, supra note 13. |
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Mutcherson, K. Disability, Procreation, and Justice in the United States. Laws 2017, 6, 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws6040027
Mutcherson K. Disability, Procreation, and Justice in the United States. Laws. 2017; 6(4):27. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws6040027
Chicago/Turabian StyleMutcherson, Kimberly. 2017. "Disability, Procreation, and Justice in the United States" Laws 6, no. 4: 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws6040027
APA StyleMutcherson, K. (2017). Disability, Procreation, and Justice in the United States. Laws, 6(4), 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws6040027